Guest guest Posted May 15, 2003 Report Share Posted May 15, 2003 http://www.thisisgloucestershire.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=115271 & command=dis\ playContent & amp;sourceNode=115268 & amp;contentPK=5601670 CAGED, BOUND AND A FERTILE HAVEN FOR A SARS II 11:00 - 15 May 2003 Cruel Far Eastern animal markets trading in the flesh of exotic species, are an infection timebomb ready to release a deadly super-Sars bug on the world, experts warned last night. While Asia still reels from the devastating flu-like epidemic, a leading charity says conditions are ripe for a fresh disease to sweep across the region. And Bristol's Chinese twin, the city of Guangzhou, is at the centre of the latest alarming health scare. Yesterday campaigners revealed that market workers there are still plying their sick trade in wild and domestic animals - even though the practice is banned by the government. Officials acted amid fears the barbaric trading posts sparked the quickfire spread of Sars. Despite the likely origins of the bug, the taste for exotic creatures which end up as delicacies on restaurants menus, has not been dulled. Campaigners now fear markets like Guangzhou's - overloaded with endangered wild animals kept in squalor and filth - are hotbeds of disease. Although hunting, sales and consumption of exotic animals is outlawed, Guangzhou traders were yesterday openly flouting the regulations. Experts fear the markets are an ideal breeding ground for new strains of Sars and other virulent bugs able to cross from animals to humans. Wild game sprung from traps are slung in cages with open wounds allowed to fester, untreated. Many die in pain, but their corpses are simply left to rot. Earlier this week, investigators from the Animals Asia Foundation(AAF) - which campaigns for the release of captive animals - visited the notorious Hua Nam Wild Animal Market in Guangzhou, the capital of Guangdong province. The province in southern China, is thought to be the source of the highly-infectious outbreak of the flu-like Sars disease, which has killed hundreds of people across Asia, and spread worldwide. The AAF team was appalled when they were faced with an " animal stew " of wild, endangered and domestic species, cramped together in cages and crates, caked in blood or missing limbs altogether after they were snapped in traps. AAF Veterinary Director, Dr Gail Cochrane said the wild animal markets were health hazards which could incubate a new and deadly strain of Sars. She said: " Even if the Sars virus did not evolve from animals in the markets, the conditions present an ideal environment in which other unknown or new viruses may incubate and emerge. " The only way to minimise the threat of new viruses being transmitted is to close the markets down. " The pathetic menagerie witnessed by AAF included masked palm civet - a wild cat, bigger than its domestic cousin - badgers, barking deer, wild boars, hedgehogs, foxes and squirrels. Also on sale were bamboo rats, snakes, endangered leopard cats and dogs, cats, rabbits and gerbils. Turtles and anteaters are other favourite treats on the dinner table. Dave Neale, AAF UK director based in Looe, Cornwall, said the markets provide the perfect environment for germs and infection. A public security official in Shenzhen, in the southern province of Guangdong, said last night: " In Shenzhen, we raided at least a few hundred restaurants, kitchens and markets and arrested traders there. " If convicted, traders of protected species face a 15-year jail term. But despite the mass clampdown, AAF said yesterday that the markets were still trading. AAF is now calling for an immediate enforcement of a ban on animal markets. -- Dave Neale Animals Asia Foundation Find out more about the historic China Bear Rescue by visiting the Animals Asia Foundation website at http://www.animalsasia.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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